Photograph of Alexander von Benckendorff.
Alexander von Benckendorff

Overview

Count Alexander von Benckendorff, (, Aleksandr Khristoforovich Benkendorf, 1783-September 23, 1844) was a Russian Lieutenant General and statesman, Adjutant General of the Svita and a commander in Patriotic War of 1812 best remembered for having established the Gendarmes in Russia.

Alexander von Benckendorff was born to a Baltic German family in Reval (now Tallinn, Estonia). His brother Konstantin von Benkendorff was a general and diplomat, and his sister Dorothea von Lieven was a socialite and political force famous at London and Paris. During Napoleon's invasion of Russia, Beckendorff led the Velizh offensive, taking prisoner three French generals as a result. When Moscow was liberated, he became the commander of its garrison. In the foreign campaigns, he defeated a French contingent at Tempelberg and was one of the first Russians to enter Berlin. He further distinguished himself at Leipzig and cleared the Netherlands from the French. After the Britons and Prussians arrived to succeed him, his unit proceeded to take Louvain and Mechelen, liberating 600 imprisoned Englishmen on the way.

In 1821 he attempted to warn Alexander I of the Decembrist clandestine organisations, but the Tsar ignored his note. After the 1825 Decembrist Revolt, he sat on the investigation committee and lobbied for the creation of the Corps of Gendarmes and the Third Section of His Imperial Majesty's Own Chancellery. He was the first Chief of Gendarmes and Executive Director of the Third Section (1826-1844). Under his management, the Third Section established a strict censorship over literature and theater plays. Yet by temperament, he was the very opposite of a proto-Dzerzhinsky or a proto-Beria; he suffered from a bizarre tendency to forget his own name, and periodically had to be reminded of it by consulting his own visiting card http://www.mk.by/archiv/05.10.2004/rub5.php. After the mid 1830's, his family seat was the Gothic Revival manor, Schloss Fall (now Keila-Joa) near Tallinn http://www.baltische-ritterschaften.de/forum/?de=true&language=de&message=.74.1.

Further reading

* Ronald Hingley, The Russian Secret Police: Muscovite, Imperial, and Soviet Political Security Operations (Simon & Schuster, New York, 1970). ISBN 0-671-20886-1 * R. J. Stove, The Unsleeping Eye: Secret Police and Their Victims (Encounter Books, San Francisco, 2003). ISBN 1-893554-66-X * Judith Lissauer Cromwell, "Dorothea Lieven: A Russian Princess in London and Paris" (McFarland and Co., 2007) ISBN 0-7864-2651-9
Benckendorff's Notes
In 2001, a Moscow publisher came out with Zapiski Zapiski Benkendorfa: 1812 God: Otechestvennaia Voina; 1813 God: Osvobozhdenie Niderlandov (Yaziki Slav'anskix Kul'tur, Moscow, 2001). ISBN 5-7859-0228-1. (The title translates to Benkendorf's notes: 1812: The Patriotic war; 1813: Liberation of the Netherlands). This book reproduces two sections of Benckendorff's private notes which had previously not seen publication since 1903, along with commentary, some associated regimental history and letters.

According to the book cited above, Benckendorff kept personal notes/diaries throughout his life. One additional source for his notes, in this case from the late 1830's, can be found in volume 91 of the journal Istoricheskij (alternate spelling: Istoricheskii) Vestnik for 1903.
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That biography says:

...Stylistically he was a revivalist, using Greek, Renaissance, Baroque, and Gothic for his inspiration. His first independent work was a Neo-Gothic castle at Keila-Joa, a residence of Count Alexander von Benckendorff near Tallinn....

This biography says:

...Stove, The Unsleeping Eye: Secret Police and Their Victims (Encounter Books, San Francisco, 2003). ISBN 1-893554-66-X * Judith Lissauer Cromwell, "Dorothea Lieven: A Russian Princess in London and Paris" (McFarland and Co., 2007) ISBN 0-7864-2651-9

That biography says:

...Parts of the Princess’s diary, her correspondence with Lords Aberdeen and Grey, François Guizot, Prince Metternich, and her letters from London to her brother Count Alexander von Benckendorff, have been published. There is a vast trove of unpublished material in the British Library, and a scattering of unpublished correspondence in several Continental archives...

That biography says:

...Count Alexander von Benckendorff was another passionate admirer of Baroness Amalie von Krüdener. Her influence was so great that he even secretly converted to Catholicism...

That biography says:

...Fallmerayer's anti-Russian sentiments were not yet fully developed, and upon his return to Munich in 1842, he was befriended by the Russian poet and diplomat Fyodor Tyutchev. This latter had been entrusted by Karl Nesselrode and Alexander von Benckendorff to find a new spokesperson for Russian interests in Germany. Fallmerayer's Greek thesis had aroused interest in Russian circles, and it was perhaps for this reason that Tyutchev approached Fallmerayer and proposed that he should serve as a journalistic mouthpiece for Czarist policy...
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That biography says:

Konstantin von Benckendorff (, Konstantin Khristoforovich Benkendorf, January 31, 1785-August 6, 1828) was a Russian general and diplomat. His brother Alexander von Benckendorff (1783-1844) was also a general and statesman, and his sister Dorothea von Lieven was a political force famous at London St...